From the late nineteenth century to the 1950s one of the main foci of aesthetic inquiry was the attempt to develop definitions of art and such related concepts as visual art, music, tragedy, beauty, and metaphor. Clive Bell (1958) famously stated that either all works of visual art have some common quality or when we speak of “work of art” we speak nonsense. DeWitt H. Parker (1939) argued more generally that the assumption underlying every philosophy of art is the existence of some common nature present in all the arts. This search for a common quality or nature of art was generally taken to be a form of essentialism
From prehistoric Venuses and their attributes, praising fecundity and fertility of soil with represe...
The paper takes interest in some of the conditions that made possible the development of everyday ae...
Stanley Cavell and Thierry de Duve have independently proposed that judgments of the type “This is a...
From the late nineteenth century to the 1950s one of the main foci of aesthetic inquiry was the atte...
The successful specification of the definition of art has so far proven elusive. Discouraged by repe...
How should one explain the relative disappearance of a major preoccupation of English-speaking Analy...
Since the publication of Morris Weitz\u27s paper The Role of Theory in Aesthetics in 1956, anti-es...
Treating exceptional cases as marks of an essence is as bad as essentialism. I suggest we understand...
The aim of this article is to assess critically and compare Morris Weitz’s anti-essentialist theory ...
This paper is mainly situated within the tradition of analytic aesthetics. It concerns the formalist...
In a talk I gave ten years ago, ‘What If There Were No Such Thing as the Aesthetic? ’ I tried to sho...
Everyday aesthetics as a new subdiscipline within aesthetics benefits by constantly going back to an...
My point of departure in this chapter is a claim about aesthetic properties that seems hard to deny ...
In the West, beauty has always been seen as a major endeavour of the arts. The intellectual and spir...
It seems necessary to introduce the basic concepts used in this article i.e. formalism, anti-formali...
From prehistoric Venuses and their attributes, praising fecundity and fertility of soil with represe...
The paper takes interest in some of the conditions that made possible the development of everyday ae...
Stanley Cavell and Thierry de Duve have independently proposed that judgments of the type “This is a...
From the late nineteenth century to the 1950s one of the main foci of aesthetic inquiry was the atte...
The successful specification of the definition of art has so far proven elusive. Discouraged by repe...
How should one explain the relative disappearance of a major preoccupation of English-speaking Analy...
Since the publication of Morris Weitz\u27s paper The Role of Theory in Aesthetics in 1956, anti-es...
Treating exceptional cases as marks of an essence is as bad as essentialism. I suggest we understand...
The aim of this article is to assess critically and compare Morris Weitz’s anti-essentialist theory ...
This paper is mainly situated within the tradition of analytic aesthetics. It concerns the formalist...
In a talk I gave ten years ago, ‘What If There Were No Such Thing as the Aesthetic? ’ I tried to sho...
Everyday aesthetics as a new subdiscipline within aesthetics benefits by constantly going back to an...
My point of departure in this chapter is a claim about aesthetic properties that seems hard to deny ...
In the West, beauty has always been seen as a major endeavour of the arts. The intellectual and spir...
It seems necessary to introduce the basic concepts used in this article i.e. formalism, anti-formali...
From prehistoric Venuses and their attributes, praising fecundity and fertility of soil with represe...
The paper takes interest in some of the conditions that made possible the development of everyday ae...
Stanley Cavell and Thierry de Duve have independently proposed that judgments of the type “This is a...